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Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Appalachian Trail: A Philanthropic Journey


The Appalachian Trail is a phenomenon that has developed over several decades. The trail spans 14 states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Georgia. With the trail reaching 2,180 miles (roughly 5,000,000 steps) starting from Springer Mountain in Georgia and ending at Mount Katahdin in Maine, it is something that hardly anything else can compare to. The Appalachian Trail itself runs through 167 miles of national parks and 538 miles of national forests.
            More than half of all of American people live less than a day’s drive from the trail giving easy access to many visitors. The highest point on the trail is Clingman’s Dome located along the Smokey Mountains in western North Carolina. The Appalachian Trail also has a wide variety of wildlife and plants. The diverse species of trees in the Smokey Mountains alone is more than all of northern Europe
            The Appalachian Trail emerged as an idea proposed by Benton MacKaye, a forester in the United States forest service, in 1921. Benton stated, “…retreat from a civilization which was becoming too mechanized, a trail should be laid in the heart of the mountains and over their crests all the way from Katahdin, Maine to Mount Oglethorpe in Georgia.” His concern was that many industries treated the Appalachian Mountains’ forests like that of a coal mine continuously taking resources from the area until they would simply run out and destroy the area. This is why he urged for such a movement in order to get away from all of the mechanization and back to nature in order to have a better understanding on the true important things in life.
Many trail clubs throughout the states supported the idea of having a trail spanning the east coast. The idea was to have each region run on its on by the various clubs that maintained trails throughout each particular state. Benton MacKaye especially enjoyed the idea of having the trail run by volunteers, which made the people more responsible toward developing the trail instead of relying on government to develop the trail.
Since there were already so many trails going through each state, a lot of it was simply a matter of being able to connect them all. Benton argued that not only was it important to conserve the large amount of forests that span the area, but it would also help prevent forest fires by having multiple trails and easy access throughout the Appalachian Mountains. Many agreed to that notion and were more urged to put forth an effort to have such a trail made. Of course there were some complications trying to connect all of the different trails at the time. About half of the trail had to go through private land, which at the time many owners were compliant, but would later cause complications with owners and how they wanted to use the land.
By 1931, a lawyer named Myron Avery became the chairman of the Appalachian Trail Conference and held the position for over 20 years. The Appalachian Trail Conference formed as a private organization that would serve as an umbrella organization for the 31 Appalachian Trail Clubs formed to preserve all of the trails. All of these organizations were completely volunteer based and works without endowment with the soul purpose to volunteer for the betterment of the Appalachian Trail. With the combined effort of the various volunteer groups as well as state and national parks, the Appalachian Trail would be on its way to completion.
By the year 1937, the trail would be considered complete and would allow people to hike the entire trail. Unfortunately, the trail would soon have to close in the year 1938 because of a hurricane that struck the New England Area. This would create a long and large setback for the Appalachian Trail because it would be covered in debris and amount to multiple other complications. The Appalachian Trail Conference would not get much support in terms of redeveloping the trail and since the Blue Ridge Parkway would begin its development in Virginia as well as the hurricane, and World War 2, the Appalachian Trail would be forced to postpone any effort of completion.
A whole 13 years later, in the year of 1951, the trail would officially reopen with eastern mountain trails being completed stretching all the way from Mount Katahdin in Maine to Mount Oglethorpe in Georgia. At that time, the trail would be 2,021 miles long and have its first thru-hiker, Earl Shaffer, who was the first person to have reported completing the entire trail. This would not be the end of the fight for the Appalachian Trail Conference though. By the mid 1970s, half of the trail was still on private land and the owners threatened to split the trail into different parts and have the Appalachian Trail divided.
The Appalachian Trail Conference would continue to advocate and fight for the Appalachian Trail and in 1978 they would finally fulfill their mission when President Johnson would sign a bill granting nearly $100,000,000 to protect these lands under federal authority allowing the Appalachian Trail to remain where it was and not have any interference from roads, house developments, or any other private interest that would alter the area. By 1984, The Appalachian Trail Conference would hold full responsibility over the entire trail by the Department of the Interior. The entire organization still remained volunteer-based overseeing 250,000 acres and as many workers as a national park would.
In present day the Appalachian Trail Conference has evolved into the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, which is a nonprofit organization overseeing the 31 clubs that maintain the entire trail. Many of the people who work for the Appalachian Trail Conservancy have been advocates for the environment as well as national parks throughout the United States. The mission of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy is to preserve and manage the trail and being devoted to the idea of the trail being around for future generations to enjoy for centuries. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy doesn’t stop on the trail, it also has developed program to help kids K-12 learn more about the Appalachian Trail. The program is called “The Trail to Every Classroom” which engages youth in volunteer activities, encourages a love for learning, creates a conservation ethic, and forms a respect for the Appalachian Trail.
The Appalachian Trail Conservancy also continues to advocate for the protection of the Trail. Since 1972, over $180,000,000 of the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund has gone toward the protection of the Appalachian Trail. Through advocacy efforts, the ATC has secured much of, but are still fighting to acquire nearly 10 miles of the trail. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy also advocates the prevention of road development near the road in order to keep the area protected and thriving.
The Appalachian Trail is probably one of the greatest philanthropic efforts in the history of the United States and perhaps even the world. The entire trail would not function without volunteers that willingly go do necessary upkeep of the trail in order for hikers to continue using it. Not only does it completely rely on volunteers, it is also one of the largest, longest conservation projects in the entire world. Not only is the Appalachian Trail one of the greatest trails in the entire world, but it is also the greatest experience someone could ever have by going out into the wild to truly understand the important things in life and gaining perspective that couldn’t be achieved any other way.






Bibliography
MacKaye, Benton, Great Appalachian Trail From New Hampshire to the Carolinas. February 18, 1923

Torrey, Raymond; Great Trail For Hikers Grows In Appalachians. May 5,1929; The New York Times

Armstrong, Bryan, National Geographic: Appalachian Trail. 2009

Author Unknown, Appalachiantrail.org

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